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Rick Steves: France’s Gothic cathedrals endure, despite wars, fires

Despite many years of travelling to France, I still can’t help but marvel at the towering Gothic churches that mark the hearts of many French cities.
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The pointed arches of Gothic cathedrals allow for dramatic stained-glass windows, such as the ones in Chartres' cathedral.

Despite many years of travelling to France, I still can’t help but marvel at the towering Gothic churches that mark the hearts of many French cities.

The Gothic style of architecture, primarily employed in churches, evolved in medieval France as a way to give interior spaces a better-lit, more upward-reaching feel than the dark, heavy Romanesque architecture that preceded it.

As French urban life grew more stable, churches didn’t need to be so fortress-like — and engineering innovations allowed architects to built airier vertical churches that seemed to stretch heavenward, their walls given over to windows to allow maximum illumination.

Newly pointed arches allowed churches to grow higher and more dramatic on the outside, while making space for colourful stained-glass windows on the inside.

Counterweight “flying buttresses” — stone arches that reach up from the ground to push inward on relatively weak external walls, thereby supporting the roof — go even further in making the interior of giant stone buildings feel almost weightless.

While it will be some time before visitors can once again take in France’s most famous Gothic wonder, Paris’s Notre-Dame cathedral, plenty of other magnificent Gothic cathedrals are sprinkled across the country like jewelled pins on a map.

I like to imagine what it was like to be a pilgrim 600 years ago, hiking for days to a particular church on a holy day — and feeling the awe when the soaring spire of the cathedral finally appeared on the horizon.

Nowadays, you can hop on a train in Paris and, for example, arrive in just over an hour in Chartres, home of the cathedral that is arguably Europe’s best example of pure Gothic. Officially known as the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Chartres, it’s one of more than a hundred churches dedicated to “Our Lady” (Notre Dame) around France — and, like Paris’s Notre-Dame, Chartres’ also experienced a harrowing fire.

While mostly made of stone, many Gothic churches feature a wooden roof and/or spire, making them susceptible to fires. Amazingly, after Chartres’ cathedral burnt to the ground in 1194, it took just 30 years to rebuild — astonishing when you consider it took centuries to build cathedrals such as Paris’s Notre-Dame.

What visitors see now is a unity of architecture, statuary and stained glass that captures the spirit of the 13th century “Age of Faith” like no other church.

At the time of Chartres’ fire, the church owned the veil supposedly worn by Mary when she gave birth to Jesus, making this small town a major player on the pilgrim circuit. While the veil was feared lost in the fire, it was “found” days later in the crypt.

This miracle (or marketing ploy) became the impetus to rebuild quickly. You can still view the veil, but for me the highlight of the church is the central window behind the altar: the “Blue Virgin” window.

It shows Mary dressed in the famed “Chartres blue,” a sumptuous colour made by mixing cobalt oxide into the glass.

Two of my favourite Gothic cathedrals are just north of Chartres, in neighbouring Normandy. In contrast to small-town Chartres, Rouen was France’s second-largest city in medieval times. Its cathedral is primarily famous as a landmark of art history. Today, you can see what Claude Monet saw when he painted 30 different studies of this mid-14th century facade at various seasons and times of day, capturing his “impressions” as the light played across its exquisitely detailed masonry.

Rouen’s cathedral was constructed between the 12th and 14th centuries, though lightning strikes, wars (the cathedral was accidentally bombed in the Second World War), and other destructive forces meant constant rebuilding.

Inside is a chapel dedicated to Joan of Arc (she was convicted of heresy in Rouen and burned at the stake there in 1431) and several stone tombs that date from when Rouen was the capital of the dukes of Normandy (including one containing the heart of English King Richard the Lionheart).

Two hours west of Rouen, Bayeux’s cathedral — as big as Paris’s Notre-Dame — dominates its small town. Its two towers and west facade were originally Romanesque, but the towers were later capped with tall Gothic spires, and the facade embellished with a decorative Gothic “curtain” of architectural details.

Its interior is also a mix of styles, with solid round arches in the nave’s ground level supporting gracefully Gothic upper storeys that soar high above.

Historians believe the Bayeux tapestry, the 70-metre-long embroidery telling the story of William the Conqueror’s victory in the Battle of Hastings, was originally designed to, and did, encircle the nave.

The most impressive Gothic church in eastern France is in Strasbourg, where its venerable cathedral — another “Notre-Dame” — is a true jaw-dropper.

This Gothic spectacle somehow survived the French Revolution, the Franco-Prussian War and both World Wars. The interior is worth savouring slowly, with its wide nave, exquisite gold-leaf organ and elaborately carved stone pulpit.

The marvelous stained glass, 80 per cent of which is original, dates as far back as the 12th century. The church’s exterior, with its cloud-piercing spire (at 142 metres, it was the world’s tallest until the mid-1800s) and red sandstone (from the 13th and 14th centuries), stands out from the other great Gothic churches in France.

Gothic churches have proved themselves resilient, both physically and as still-powerful works of architectural art. Through wars, fires and Mother Nature, France’s great cathedrals have survived thanks to their ingenuity of design and the loving care of the people they serve.

Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.